Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 11, 1963, Page 4, Image 4

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    ; '. PAGE 4
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
MARKETS and FINANCE
! Stocks
NEW YORK STOCKS
By United Press International
Allied Chemical
I Alum Co Am
j American Air Lines
; American Can
American Motors
A T & T
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
-Armco
-Santa Fe
"Bendix Corp
t Bethlehem Steel
; Boeing Air
Caterpillar Corp
;V Chrysler Corp
;Coca Cola
;C.B.S.
Columbia Gas
Continental Can
Crown Zellerbach
Crucible Steel
Curtis Wright
Dow Chemicca!
Du Pont
Eastman Kodak
Firestone
:; Ford
: General Electric
I General Foods
General Motors
;-Georgia Pacific
- Greyhound
, Gulf Oil
Homestake
"Idaho Power
: I.B.M.
Int. Paper
Johns Manville
Kennecott Copper
Lockheed Aircraft
Martin
Merck
Montgomery Ward
. Nat'l Biscuiti
59'.
18Vj
46
18
1174
31
S3
26V4
56
30
2S'i
38
80
89
46
28
45
49
17
17
61
mi
111
35 Vt
46
78
45Vi
33'a
407
29
45
70
52
21
80
34
45
15
-: New York Central
39
Pac Gas Elec
33
Dmniui I
45
14
- Wonn HH
Perma Cement
14
Phillips
48
proctor oamrae
Radio Corporation
Richfield Oil
Safeway
Sears
Shell Oil
Socony Mobil Oil
Southern Co:
Southern Pacific
:Sperry Rand
; Standard California
73
6IV4
40
47
36
59
54T4
29
59
63
Standard Indiana
Standard N. J.
Stekley Van Camp
Sun Mines
Texas Co.
Texas Gulf Sulfur
Texas Pacific Land Trust
Thiokol
49
59'4
9
60
14
19
28
i rans rtmero
Trans World Air
Trl Continental
47
44
109
34
53
32
45
43
4'
32
34
87!
United Carbide
Union Pacific
United Aircraft
United Air Lines
U.S. Plywood
U.S. Rubber
U.S. Steel
West Bank Corp
Wcstinghouse
Youngstown
Slopped Short I
LOS ANGELES IUPH -Stonewall
Henderson drove bis truck
into a stone wall Tuesday.
"1 lost my brakes and thought
maybe a utility pole would slop
me," Henderson said. "But it was
like coine through a toothnirk. so
then I chose the stone wall. It
stopped me."
Crime Repeated
HOUSTON, Tex. l'PH -Insurance
adjuster E. M.. Jordan con
gratulated the Harris Counly sher
iff's office Tuesday for recovering
;a stolen car insured by his com
pany.
; But when Jordan went to pick
up the aulo behind the Criminal
Courts Building. It wasn't there
It had been stolen again.
Ski Reports
1 underline Lodge: Tolal snow
46 inches, no now: wind east 40
mph gusts to 60; chains needed;
, Double Chair and Betsy Tow opcr
, ating.
Mt. Bachelor: Temp. 12 below
at 7 a m.; total snow 39 inches;
skiing fair; carry chains.
DAn.Y KLAMATH BASIN SHIPMENTS
Rail Truck Combined Rail k Trick Til
Oregon
California
10 14
18 6
F.O.B. k GROWER PRICES
Klamath Basin
Demand modi-rale
Market steady
100 lb sacks Russets
IS No. 1A 2" or 4 01. mln. . 2.65 to 2.75
to 14 01. 3.25-3.50 occasional 3.75
Bakers 12 nz. mln. 3.35-3.60 occasional 3.75
Baled 10 lb. sack 2.60-2.80
IS No. 2 mostly 1.M
Net price to growers at cellar hulk rwt:
I'S No. 1A l.SO-2.IO-mostly 2.00
IS No. 2 - .90-1.00
COMBINED RAIL A TRUCK UNLOADS
Oregon S3
Total All 0her Stales - 627
One Week Ago
Oregon 17
Total All Other States - 370
Friday, January 11, 1963
WALL STREET
NEW YORK (UPI) - Stocks
were narrowly mied today.
Steels and autos eased and Du
Pont rose nearly a point in an
otherwise steady chemical section.
Oils were narrowly mixed with the
exception of Kern County which
rose close to a point.
Some tobaccos and foods moved
higher.
Grains
CHICAGO (UPD-Grain range
High Low Close
Wheat
Mar 2.08 2.07 2.08-2.08
May 2.07 2.06 2.06.
Jul ' 1.08 1.87 1.87-
Sep 1.90 1.90 1.90
Dec 1.95 1.94 1.93
Oats
Mar .73 .73 .73-.73
May .70 .70 .70-70
Jul .67 .67 .67
Sep ,67A
Rye
Mar 1.34 1.33 1.33-
May 1.20 1.29 1.29
Sep 1.25 1.25 1.25
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND (UPI) (USDA)
Weekly livestock:
Cattle 2900; high choice steers
27.65-27.75; good-choice 27-27.50
standard good Holstcins 22-23.50;
mostly choice heifers 26, good 23
25; canner cows 10-13: cuttcr-util
ity bulls 17-21.
Calves 450; few choice vcalers
reached 33; most good-choice 30-
32; standard-good 23-28; good
choice feeder steers 26-28.
Hogs 1550; 1 and 2 barrow and
gilts 17.75-18; sows 1 and 2 to
375 lb 14-15.
Sheep 1400; high choice and few
prime long hauled wooled lambs
brought 20.50 Monday; fall shorn
pelts 19.50; choice 90-100 lb wooled
lambs at close 18.75-19.25; cull-
good ewes 5-6.
Stocks
MUTUAL FUNDS
Prices until 10 a.m. PST today
Bid Asked
Affiliated Fund 7.56 8.17
Atomic Fund 4.59 5.01
Blue Ridge 11.60 12.68
Bullock 12.40 13.60
Chemical Fund 10.42 11.33
Comw. Inv. 9.48 10.36
Diver Growth 8.10 8.88
xDreyfus ' 15.79 17.16
E & II Stock 13.00 14.05
Fidelity Capital 7.76 . 8.43
Fidelity Trend 12.13 13.18
Fin Inv Fund 4.09 4.48
Fodndcrs Fund 5.74 6.24
Fundamental 9.16 10.04
Group Sec Com 12.38 13.56
Gr Sec Avla El 6.88 7.54
Hamilton H.D.A. 4.80 4.80
Hamilton C-7 4.90 5.36
Incorp Inv. 6.94 7.56
ICA 9.68 10.58
Investor's Group Fund
Intercontinental 5.76 6.23
Mutual 10.89 11.77
Slocks 17,63 19.06
Selected 10 27 10.98
Variable 6.21 6.83
Keystone B-l 4.296 26.05
Keystone 13.35 14.57
Keystone S-4 4.01 4.39
M.I.T. 13.65 14.92
M.I.T. Growths 7.53 8.23
Nat l Inv 14.32 15.48
Nat'l Sec Div 3.79 4.04
Nat ! Grow th 7.85 8 58
Nat'l Sec Slock 7.69 8.40
Putnam Fund 14.67 15.95
Putnam Growth 8.16 8.87
Selected Amer 8.91 9.64
Slmreholdcrs 10 47 11.44
TV Fund 7.17 7.81
United Aocum 13.36 14.60
t'nited Canada 17.59 19 12
United Continental 6.55 7 16
United Income 11 .58 12 66
United Science 6.33 6 .92
Value Lines 5.13 5 61
Wellington 13.99 15.25
Whitehall 13.62 14.08
LOCAL SF.CIRIT1KS
Prices until 11:30 a.m. PST today
Hid Asked
Bank of America 57 60
Cal Pac Ulil 24 26
Con Freight 13 14
Equitable S & L 32 34
1st Nat l Bank 60 63
Jantrrn 24 26
Morrison Knudscn 29 31
Mult Kennels 3 4
N.W. Natural Gas 32 34'.
Oregon Metallurgical I 1
PP&L 25 27
PGE 26 26
US. Nail Bank 66 72
United L'til 32 34
West Coast Tel 20 22
Weyerhaeuser 2.V 26
24
24
Cardinal Offers Help
To Release Prisoners
BOSTON lUPD-Richard Cardi
nal Cushing, Roman Catholic
archbishop of Boston, said today
he is willing to go to Cuba to
negotiate the release of prisoners
still held there if Fidel Castro
asks him to do so.
The cardinal, at a news con
ference, said, "I'd even go to
China to intercede for the men
they're holding there if I wcr
asked."
"When I took over this fund
raising, I was willing to go all
the way, even to Cuba, if it was
necessary. I still am willing," he
sard.
The cardinal said Thursday he
was the "mysterious donor' who
raised $1 million to help free
prisoners captured in the ill-fated
April 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion
of Cuba.
The cardinal told a news con
ference today that the money
avoided "the slow death of the
prisoners. I do not so much call
it a ransom. I would rather call
it an exchange. I personally be-
lieve that my identification with
the fund raising is going to have
tremendous impact in Latin
American countries."
It will have a wholesome ef
fect on the relationship between
these countries and the United
Slates. The Latin American
people are cxremely cognizant of
the work we are trying 10 ao in
their countries. They will look up
on me in this light: 'Here is one
individual who collected $1 mil
lion from people jof all faiths.' "
The cardinal said many priesis
contributed to the fund-raising
drive "because priests were in
terned in Cuba. No foundation
gave even a penny."
He said ne gave some money
hut declined to say how much.
The cardinal said he received
no "great substantial contribution
from one source. He said tne
lareest Gift in the archdiocese,
Bert Albert
Funeral Set
On Saturday
Funeral services will be held
from the chapel of Ward's Klam
ath Funeral Home Saturday, Jan.
12. at 10:30 a.m. for Bert Rob
ert Albert, Chiloquin businessman
for 37 vcars and a resident ot
Klamath County (or 40 years. 11c
lived in Malin before moving to
ChHonuin where he owned and
operated the Modoc Motor Co.
during his residence there.
Rev. Harvey Zeller, pastor of
Williamson River Church, will ol
ficiatc. Final rites and inter
ment will be in Eternal Hills Me
morial Gardens. Active pallbear
ers will be Gene Corbin, Walt
Pohll, Jack Siemons, Herman
Akin, Carroll Cornell, Don Ritiol.
Honorary will be Walter Zimmer
man, Dwight Kircher, Quince Bit
cll. Earl Hall, Mark Sullivan.
Vern Norval.
Mr. Albert had retired only sev
en days before his death.
He was a veteran of World
War I serving with the U.S.
Army, served as mayor of Chilo
nuin one term and was active
in public allairs and progress 01
the Chiloquin Community. He was
a member of the Masonic Lodge
of Ekalaka. Mont., was a native
of Hector, Minn., born Feb. 10.
1897.
Survivors include the widow
Verna, Chiloquin; daughters, Mrs.
Fred ( Paula' Fletcher, Klamath
Falls, Mrs. Tony iWanda) Castel,
Lakeview; brothers, Theodore.
Silverton. Henry, Sherwood. Her
bert. Ekalaka, Mont., Waller,
Klamath Falls, Harold, Detroit.
Mich.. Edgar. Union. Ore.; sis-
lers. Mrs. Charles Torhert, Hec
tor, Minn., and Mrs. II E. Nel
son, Minot. N.D.; also live grand
children, Lynn. Rhonda, Laurie
Fletcher, and Lana and Keith Cas
tel.
Atom Center
NEVADA TEST SITE (UPP-
The status of a wildcat strike at
this atomic proving ground, which
was honored Thursday by 80 per
cent of tlie union work force, was
not expected to be known until
later today.
A wildcat picket line was thrown
up in front of the sprawling des
ert facility, but because it was
taken down after union members
were supposed to start to work.
an Atomic Energy lommissionl
spokesman said "we will not know
where e stand until Friday."
The spokesman, who described
ihe situation as "confusing," said
no per cent of the union member
ship here of a tolal estimated at
belween 3.000 ami 4.noivdid not
report for work Thursd.iy.
W ipciiixt in Get
Wl" flow. tt and flerol
novtlH. Phont Nybck't
for luggithoni, and dt-livtry.
was $1,000 but he declined to say
who made it. .
Cardinal Cushing said it took
him until the end of last week
to raise the money.
The cardinal said Thursday he
worked night and day and "I alone
am responsible for the collection
of this extraordinary sum. The
credit however belongs to my co
workers and benefactors in the
United States and Latin America
who have supported my apostolic
work.
In a statement appearing today
in the archdiocesan weekly news
paper, the Pilot, he said he was
disclosing his part in raising the
ransom money because of ru
mors crediting the gift as coming
from sources with which I have
no identification."
Just before Christmas and prior
to the release of the prisoners,
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro in
dicated it would be necessary to
pay $2.9 million in addition to the
$53 million in medicine and food
before the men would be freed
At that time Alty. Gen. Robert
F. Kennedy said "I made one
phone call and received a pledge
for a million dollars.
He refused to disclose the
identity of the mysterious donor,
but Thursday night Justice .De
partment officials confirmed that
it was Cardinal Cushing.
Tule Lauds
4-H Leaders
(Continued from Page 1)
for the continuance of the Amer
ican way of life." In closing, he
outlined the power company's in
terest in improving the lot of the
farmer, introduction of new agri
cultural methods and ideas.
While the banquet last night
was the first in this part of the
area served by PP&L, similar
meetings have been held through
out the power company's service
district. Recognition banquets
ere started 18 years ago in the
Yakima Valley.
C. A. Boyden, local manager
PP&L, who introduced the
speaker, was assisted in banquet
arrangements by Bob Savage, Al
luras, Modoc County farm advis-
in charge of Tulclake work
here.
Savage installed Jerry Macken
as 4-H Leaders Council president;
Jcanette Marshall, vice president,
and Juanita Tatum, secretary
treasurer. The local council has
from 40-50 leaders.
Tribute was paid to two long-
lime leaders, Dave Carmen with
10 years leadership, and Stan
Buckingham with seven years.
Among those introduced were
Siskiyou County Supervisor Earl
Agcr, Tulclake; Bill Whitakcr,
manager of the Tulclake Butte
Valley Fair: Mrs. Thclma Mitch
ell, adviser. Future Homemak-
ers ol Tulclake Joint union llign
School: Bob Bostcr, Future Farm
ers of America adviser; Sam
llitchcy, district manager, PP&L;
A. H. Schmidt, Mcdford, Agricul
tural Sales engineer, PPM.; Jer
ry Macken, 4-H leaders Council
president: Rev. Wayne Waltman.
Tulclake Community Presbyterian
Church, wlio gave the invocation
and benediction; Mrs. Merle
Jones, clerk-stenographer, Tulc
lake PP&L office; George Wright
and John Byron, PP&L employes.
Dave Carmen led group sing
ing. Kenneth and Howard Mas
sen played accordion numbers.
The banquet was prepared and
served by members of t he Re
lict Society of the Tulclake LDS
Church.
Sheriff Offide
Holds Woman
Phyllis Lund, 30. Walla Walla.
Wash., was taken into custody by
Sheriff Murray "Hed" Brillon
from Walla Walla police Thurs
day and returned here to answer
charges for torgcry, Ihe sheriff's
off ire has reported.
Miss Lund had been associated
with louis Trenton L'lter, also ol
Walla Walla, who was indicted
for forgery by the Klamath Coun
ty Grand Jury last Wednesday.
The latter is in Ihe counly jail
in lieu of $5,000 bail and was
scheduled (or arraignment Fri
day, Jan. 10.
Funerals
AIM RT
funf'Hl rvi( fir B'( RfJhfrt Alff't
wit tx he'd Irom tr c"i'l fi n'tj(
Minith Funt'fli hew SaHitIav. Jn 1?
t 10 .W m Concluding it'V'tH I'Ornji
Mill l.AwrJf"
E . 1 B.'.u 1 . i" ' 1
plm LTDJOiiG? r ,: ffi
EFFICIENCY NOTED Maj. Gen. H. R. Splcer, third from left, 25th Air Dlviiion
commander at McChord Air Force Base, presents the Air Defense Command Heating
Plant Award to Col. Edwin J. Witzenburger, commanding officer of Kingsley Air Field,
during the general's visit to the air base Thursday. The award was presented to ths
air field for its efficient management, operation and maintenance of its heating plant.
At the presentation were, left to right, Sam E. Moss, general superintendent of base
engineers; Richard J. Melick, boiler plant operator; General Spicer; Colonel Witzen
burger; Capt. Harry L. Maxwell, base engineer; and Col. Leon W. Gray, commander
of the Portland Air De fenso Sector. .
Power Fight
Could Halt
Organization
oALdwa iuiji me power
battle which erupted Thursday be
tween Democratic and Republican
leadership could halt organization
of the 1963 House of Representa
tives. It has happened before.
In 1897 the House was unable
to organize, the state library re
ported. After about 20 days of
trying, it gave' up and went home.
No business was conducted.
It's happened in the Senate, too.
In 1957 the Senate split 15-15
and went 11 days and about 200
ballots before organizing.
The 1957 fight was between Sen.
Walter Pearson. D-Portland, and
Warren Gill, R-Lebanon, over the
presidency of tlio Senate. The
impass ended with the election of
compromise candidate Boyd Over-
hulse, D-Madias.
In both cases when members
of one party were absent, giving
Ihe opposition the numerical ad
vantage, the full party member
ship walked out of the chambers
so there was no quorum and no
vole could be taken.
Mark Sees
Good Times
i
For Oregon
SALEM 1 UPI 1 - Gov. Mark
Hatfield Unlay termed the 19B1-63
hiennium a period "of advancc-j
meat along the Oregon Trail."
The statement was included in
Hatfield's biennial report of the
executive department which
traced progress noted during the
past two years.
The governor said the slate's
program of economic diversifica
tion moved ahead.
He said Oregon's economy '
19H2 afforded work opportunity to
more people than ever before in
history." while non-farm employ
ment reached a record level.
Hatfield said tourism "took a
stronger hold on its position as
Oregon's third largest industry."
selling records in 1I and 1962.
The governor expressed disap
pointment over failure of the leg
islature to reorganize the state
government in lt, and said
some recommendations will be
resubmitted this year.
He said new facilities and pro
grams were provided in the fields
of health, education and welfare.
NOW
AT NEWS STANDS
Home delivered price still '
5175 per month, daily and Sunday
Shy Astronaut Shuns
Newsmen At
WASHINGTON (UPI) Public
ity shy astronaut Col. John H.
Glenn turned away from the Na
tional Gallery of Art without see
ing the Mona Lisa today when he
learned that newsmen and cam
ermen were wailing for him.
A representative of the National
Aeronautics and Space Adminis
tration Thursday called gallery of
ficials to ask the best time for
Glenn's visit to see the Mona Lisa.
A gallery spokesman suggested
9 a.m. when only parties of school
children would be trooping past
the world famous painting.
Glenn arrived outside the gallery
shortly before 9 a.m. in an auto
mobile. He was accompanied by
a small part of NASA officials.
Jury Holds
Mom Guilty
A circuit court jury deliberated
one hour and 40 minutes before
returning a verdict of cuiltv
against Joan Wood, 34, Rose
burg, charged wilh thild stealing.
it developed in the court of Judge
David R. Vanritnberg Thursday.
The jurist set 10 a.m., Monday,
Jan. 14 as the time for sentenc
ing.
The jury, composed of seven
women and five men, voted 11-1
for the guilty verdict following
the two-day trial in which attor
neys for the stale and defense
summoned a total of five witness
es. Mrs. Wood was charged with
taking her daughter, Glenda Lou
Wood, age 8, from Agnes School
er, who had legal custody of the
child, and taking her to Roseburg
last Oct. 13. Mrs. Wood was later
traced to Roseburg. where she
was apprehended by police in that
city and held for the Klamath
Counly Sheriff's Office.
Course Slated
A course in English composi
tion at Klamath Union High
School will begin ilan. 15 at 7
p.m. in Room 303. Louis Corrigan
will instruct.
The course will consist of a
study of functional grammar as
a background for writing clear,
concise and correct English. Indi
vidual student needs will be con
sidered. For further information
call the high school, TU 2-4446.
People Read
SPOT ADS
you are now.
UNDAY
Art Exhibit
One of them came upstairs to
ask cameramen not to- take pic
tures. It was either no pictures
or Glenn would come back later,
he indicated.
Later, a gallery spokesman, J.
Carter Brown, called newsmen
and photographers together before
the Mona Lisa and announced that
Glenn was running a little behind
schedule and was then at the near
by Smithsonian's Air Museum.
He said he did not know when
Glenn would be able to visit the
gallery, but would perhaps do so
sometime later in the day.
A newsman asked, "When we
are not here?
A NASA spokesman said Thurs
day night that Glenn wanted to
visit the gallery without any fan
fare or publicity. The astronaut
just wanted to take a quiet look
at the Mona Lisa, he said.
A NASA spokesman said later
that Glenn did not mind pictures
being taken. But, he said, the as
tronaut was concerned because he
had a tight schedule and might
be delayed for interviews.
The spokesman also said that
Glenn thought the big crowds at
the gallery would further hold
him up.
Told that arrangements had
been made for Glenn to make as
quick a visit as he wished, the
spokesman said that while they
discussed the matter, in the car
outside the gallery lime flew by
and it became too late.
Concern Seen
On Port Strike
NEW YORK (UPD President
Kennedy, showing increasing con
cern over the longshoremen's
strike which has tied up Atlantic
and Gulf Cmst Ports, met with
AFL-CIO President GcorgH Meany
on the problem today while nc
gotiations continued here.
Meany said after the meeting
in Washington that he saw no
solution in sight (or an end to
Ihe 20-day-old walkout.
Assistant Labor Secretary
James Reynolds met with the
New York Shipping Association
and after the meeting went to
union headquarters to discuss the
situation. His boss. Labor Secre
tary W. Willard Wirtz, was flying
here from Washington hut it was
not known if he was going to in
ject himself into the talks.
TU 4-8173
BILL a4 PITO
0
430 MAIN STREET
COPY
Jerry Haines Arraigned
On First Degree Count
Jerry Richard Haines, 24, in
dicted for first degree murder by
the Klamath County Grand Jury,
was arraigned by Judge David
R. Vandenberg in circuit court
Friday morning, along with five
others indicted for lesser .crimes.
Four other arraignments sched
uled for that morning were re
scheduled for later the same day
Judge Vandenberg also set 10
a.m., Friday, Jan. 18, as the time
he would receive entry of pleas
from Haines and the others ar
raigned in court.
They were:
Royal Jones, 37, assault with a
dangerous weapon, bail $5,000.
Louis Trenton Utter, 32, for
gery, bail S5.0O0.
Leonard Mackey, 37, forgery,
bail $3,500.
Arlin Lee Rich, 31, burglary in
dwelling, bail $5,000.
Robert Leon Chocktoot, 19, bur
glary not in a dwelling,, bail
$3,500.
Those rescheduled for arraign
ment later Friday afternoon in
cluded Phillip Eugene Parker, 19.
burglary not in a dwelling, bail
$.500.
Girl Tells
Of Shooting
CORVALLIS (UPII Diana
England, 9, described to a Circuit
Court jury Thursday how her step
father had picked up his shotgun
in their tiny shack south of here,
ordered her mother to stand up
and tlinn shot the mother in the
stomach, killing her.
The girl said both she and her
mother were crying when Henry
H. Mazingo fired the fatal shot.
Mazingo is on trial charged with
the first degree murder of Ethel
Mae Mazingo. 25, last Oct. 21.
Diana said the shooting oc
curred shortly after a sheriff's car
went by their house. She said
Mazingo accused her mother of
calling police. She denied it. He
went to the corner of the rftom,
Ihe girl said, got his shotgun and
then ordered the mother to stand
up. Mother and daughter were
crying and the mother tried to
comfort the daughter, the girl
said. Mazingo ordered the girl
to step aside and then shot the
mother where she stood, the girl
said.
Earlier, Judge Fred McIIenry
denied defense motions to dismiss
the indictment on the grounds
Ihe grand jury did not have suf
ficient evidence to charge Mazin
go with first degree murder.
Nikita Talks
To Pole Chiefs
WARSAW rUPH - Soviet Pre-
mier Nikita S. Khrushchev con
ferred wilh Polish leaders today
during a stopover "rest" en route
to the East German Communist
party congress in Berlin.
Polish officials said Khrushchev
was relaxing somewhere in the
province of Olsztyn. a resort area
which once was German East
Prussia. He arrived in Poland by
train Thursday.
W'ladyslaw Gomulka. the Polish
Communist party chief, joined
Khrushchev's special train Thurs
day night after it pulled into a
small station in Warsaw's eastern
suburbs. Some of Poland's cabi
net ministers were in the party
also.
Political observers expected no
spectacular developments during
Khrushchev's stav of a few davs.
'The President urgently requests your presence" is
a message that Ambassador-at-Large Thompson has
learned to take in his stride during his 34 years of
experience in the diplomatic corps. He is probably
America's top expert on Kremlin affairs.
He advises the While
House in times of grave
crises, while his wife dec
orates their home one
moment and entertains
premiers the next. For
the hectic life of a diplo
mat at home and at work, read this interesting
profile by Jack Ryan, in another of the scries "Tha
Men Wio Decide Our Destinies." f
in the JANUARY 20TH Weekend Issue of
JFamily TVeelcIy
with your copy of the
SUNDAY
Alvin Jackson, taking and using
an automobile without author
ity, bail $1,500.
The men who apparcd in cir
cuit court Friday were 10 among
13 people who nave rjecn maiclcd
by the new Grand Jury since
Ihe former jury returned its last
indictments Nov. 21.
The other three of the 13
charged with criminal offenses
were named on secret indict
ments and have not yet been lo
cated, the sheriff's office re
ported.
Play Ducats
Selling Fast
Tickets are going fast for ihe
Klamalh Civic Theatre's coming
presentation of the three-act com
edy, "The Man in the Dog Suit,"
slated for the evenings of Jan,
24, 25, 26 and 31 and Feb. 1 and 2.
The play will be presented "in
the round" at the Pine Grove
Room in the Willard Hotel and
since (lie seating is limited Ihe
public is cautioned by the group
to buy their tickets early.
Tickets are on sale at Bob's
Town and Country Jewelers, the
Klamath County Chamber of Com
merce and can be purchased from
civic theatre members.
Profits from the Jan. 31 per
formance will be donated to the
hospital fund.
Tryouts for a one-act play to be
presented by the group in Febru
ary will be held at 8 o'clock to
night, Jan. 11, in the Klamath
Auditorium. Anyone interested in
reading for a part is encouraged
by the group to come to the audi,
torium tonight.
At the last regular meeting the
group selected Charles O'Keefe to
direct the next three-act play to
be presented. A play reading
committee was named to work
with him in selecting the script.
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